Saving and Exporting Files

Aurora HDR™ サポート。

More ways to connect

As you work with digital images, at some point you’ll reach a point where saving a file is a good idea. It might be an in-progress save to capture work to date as you edit a photo. Perhaps it’s to prepare a file for printing or sharing on the Internet. Or maybe an export to social media. Aurora HDR 2018 offers many different options for saving and exporting images to meet your needs.

Saving a Native Aurora HDR File for Future Edits

As you design using layers, filters, and masks… it’s a good idea to capture that work from time-to-time. To make this easy, Aurora HDR 2018 offers a native file format, the Aurora HDR 2018 project file (its file extension is .mpaur2).

To save your work in progress, press Cmd+S / Ctrl+S on your keyboard or choose File > Save…. A new dialog opens.

Choose a new location to store the saved file on your hard drive, an attached disk, or using a Cloud storage provider.

Give the file a descriptive name.

Choose the Save original resources to Document if you want to include the information from the brackets or source files.

Choose the Save history to Document if you’d like to include the ability to undo edits that you’ve made.

When finished, click Save to write the file to disk.Your work is saved in its current state so that you can later continue from the same point. The file is saved in the proprietary Aurora HDR 2018 file format and cannot be opened with another application. For other software to use images created using Aurora HDR 2018, you’ll need to Export the file (see below).

Exporting Images

While saving a native Aurora HDR 2018 file is important, you may also need to export multiple files for other tasks. Maybe it’s to post online, to drop into a presentation, or to collaborate with others. When you export a file, you can save in a variety of file formats including JPG, TIFF, PNG and even PSD.

Saving an Image File

You can also save image files from your Aurora HDR 2018 project. These files are broadly compatible with many other applications. To create a new graphic file.

It is first suggested that you save a native Aurora HDR 2018 project first using the File > Save command.

To create a new graphic file choose File > Export… or click the Export button in the upper right of the interface. A new dialog box opens.

Choose a new location to store the saved file on your hard drive, an attached disk, or using a cloud storage provider.

Select from the following optional items:

Sharpen. Choose whether you want to Sharpen the exported file. This can increase details in the edges of the image and overcome some of the compression artifacts of formats like JPEG.

Resize. You can choose to export at the original size, or to enter a new dimension for the image to fit its long side or short side.

Color Space. You can choose from 3 color spaces for output. sRGB is the narrowest color gamut, but most compatible with the web, Adobe RGB is a common color space used in computer graphics and many software applications. ProPhoto RGB is the widest gamut and supports the broadest range of colors. ProPhoto RGB is the only color space that can contain all the colors captured in a raw format photo.

Format. Choose from eight different file formats. Some options like TIFF and JPEG may offer additional settings for control over compression and bit depth.

Give the file a descriptive name and click the Save button to write to disk.

Supported File Formats

The following types of file can be created in Aurora HDR 2018.

JPEG (.jpg) – The Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG) format is most often used to display continuous-tone images (such as photos) on the Internet. Most digital cameras use JPEG because it provides excellent compression; the maximum setting provides comparable image quality to much larger file formats like TIFF. Occasionally, the print industry (especially newspapers) will use JPEGs. JPEG is a lossy compression, which means that some data is discarded during compression of the image. JPEGs should not be used as an archive or production file format. You should generally only save JPEG files once, because re-saving continues to discard data and lower image quality. If you have acquired an image as a JPEG in your camera, be sure to save the edited document as a native Aurora HDR 2018 file.

PNG (.png) – The Portable Network Graphics format provides lossless compression. It is increasingly common on the Internet, as most web browsers support it. The PNG format was created to be a patent-free alternative to GIF. Its major advantage is the PNG-24 file, which allows for 24-bit images (8 bits per channel) and embedded transparency. It is technically superior to GIF.

GIF (.gif) – The online service provider CompuServe originally developed the Graphics Interchange Format (GIF). This format displays 8-bit or indexed-color graphics and images in HTML documents on the Internet. You’ll hear the file called both “giff” and “jiff”; both are acceptable. GIFs use a color table (with no more than 256 colors total, not per channel) to represent the image. This can lead to a small file size but also banding in the image. In most cases a JPEG is a better option for web delivery.

TIFF (.tif) – The Tagged-Image File Format is one of the most common and flexible formats available. It is widely used to exchange files between applications and computer platforms, and has a long legacy of compatibility. Additionally, TIFF is one of the formats to work in a bit depth of 8 or 16 bits per channel.

JPEG 2000 (.jp2) – The JPEG 2000 format is an update released in the year 2000 from the Joint Photographic Experts Group committee. Its intent was to replace the original JPEG format. It uses a newer wavelet-based method of image compression which is more efficient.

Photoshop (.psd) – The Photoshop format is a common format used in the computer graphics industry. Macphun cannot write a layered file, but can export a file that can be opened by Adobe Photoshop and other software packages which support the format.

PDF (.pdf) – The Portable Document Format (PDF) is a file format invented by Adobe and was intended to be an extension of PostScript. A PDF can be viewed on virtually every operating system and portable media player or phone. The PDF is an open standard, which means that the computer industry is able to create applications that can read or write PDFs without paying Adobe additional fees. This openness led to the quick adoption of PDF, and it is utilized online extensively.

__________________________________________________

NOTE

Aurora HDR 2018 will soon support several specialty file formats unique to HDR, including .HDR, .EXR and Floating Point .TIF. These formats provide terrific interoperability with other powerful applications.

__________________________________________________

Open an Image in Other Macphun Apps

Aurora HDR 2018 is part of a bigger set of tools from Macphun. If you’re on a Mac, you can easily send your image to other Macphun software products for additional enhancement or correction. Just click the Share Image… button at the top left corner of the application and choose Open In.

If you’d like to send your image to another application or service, that’s easy too. Aurora HDR 2018 integrates with several other applications and web services to make sharing your finished photo (or a work in-progress) fast and simple. Just click the Share Image… button at the top left corner of the application.

Mail – Attach a JPEG to a mail message

Messages – Send a photo as a text or instant message

Twitter – Add an image to your Tweet

Facebook – Add an image to your post

Flickr – A photo sharing community with free and paid memberships

SmugMug – An online gallery community for selling prints

500px – A photo sharing community with free and paid memberships

Open In – You can target any application which uses Aurora HDR 2018 as a plugin or extension

You may need to separately have an account on these services to access them within Aurora HDR 2018. If an application isn’t installed on your machine, it will be grayed out in the menu.